Sylvain Dornon : the Arcachon baker who stilt-walked from Paris to Moscow

The scene is Arcachon, in the latter years of the nineteenth century, and local baker Sylvain Dornon (pictured left) has taken it upon himself to popularise the bygone Landaise tradition of walking on stilts. To do this he organises demonstrations and performances, then opts to stilt-walk up the Eiffel Tower, before venturing from Paris to Moscow. But let’s go back to the start…

The use of stilts, or “échasses”, was widespread throughout the Landes from the 18th century onwards. The wooden implements (and their leather foot-straps) were primarily employed by shepherds as both an easy way of manoeuvring through marshy land and as a means of extending their field of vision when watching over their flock of sheep. Other stilt users in the Landes were messengers and postmen, keen on time-saving and maintaining a steady step. But as the wetlands became drier, due to the work of Nicolas Brémontier and previous blog subject Jules Chambrelent, so the use of stilts began to die out.

Enter Sylvain Dornon, who was born in 1858 in Salles, to the east of
Arcachon and at the northern tip of the Landes. His background wasn’t
that of a shepherd. Rather, his father was a résinier, collecting resin
from the pine trees of the region, and Sylvain became a baker in nearby
Lugos. All the while he was fascinated by music and dancing, and
during his time in Lugos he set up one of the first-ever folk-dancing
troupes to perform… on stilts. In the late 1880s, the young baker moved
to Arcachon, operating on the central Rue du Casino.

Rue du Casino is now rue du Maréchal de Lattre de Tassigny. Dornon's boulangerie can be seen to the left of this picture, and was a vacant unit when this photo was taken.

As the town’s tourist credentials were gaining momentum he hit on a
potentially lucrative idea: to entertain visitors by putting on shows in
the leafy Parc Mauresque, just metres away from his bakery. The échassier shows featured racing and dancing, culminating in a square dance number known by the Gascon name Lou Quadrilh dous tchancats (stilt-walkers were referred to as being “tchanqués”, as still are the famous huts on stilts mid-Arcachon Bay, les cabanes tchanquées).

In true street entertainment style, spectators were invited to make generous donations at the end of the show. The concept proved successful but Dornon felt he and his stilts deserved greater exposure. In September of 1889 he therefore travelled to Paris for the Exposition Universelle and, in full-on tchanqué mode, walked up the steps to the second level of the Eiffel Tower. The coup garnered extensive coverage in the press.

Arcachon's Parc Mauresque, sadly short on stilts the day I was there.

He would not stop there though. Inspired by tales of eccentric Russians travelling on foot from the western frontier of their country to France, Dornon elected to go one step further (well, several steps further) and stilt-walk all the way from Paris to Moscow. His arrival would be timed to coincide with a Franco-Russian exhibition being held there in May 1891. He secured financial backing from the magazine L’Illustration and Dornon set to work making two new pairs of stilts: one set measured 1 metre 10 centimetres and weighed 3 kilogrammes while the second, longer pair (1m80) were, along with trunks of clothes, dispatched to Moscow.

Dressed in full Landais shepherd clothing (including goat-skin coat and beret), carrying a bag containing maps, a few spare clothes and a loaded gun (you can never be too careful), Dornon set out from Place de la Concorde in Paris on March 12th 1891, surrounded by a 2,000-strong crowd of enthusiastic supporters!

The scene on Place de la Concorde, as recorded by L'Illustration (photo source: bassindarcachon.com)

Covering an average of 60 kilometres per day and in spite of harsh weather conditions and poor road surfaces, Dornon cruised through Reims, Sedan, Luxembourg, Koblenz, Berlin, Wilna and on to Moscow. Walkers and cyclists would often join him for stretches of the route, although progress was also sometimes hindered by uncooperative policemen or children who would throw stones at him, not to mention downright hostile observers, notably in Germany where the sight of a Frenchman on stilts did not systematically prove popular. On the whole though, Dornon would never fail to find a local who had heard of his venture or a hotel bed to sleep in.

The endeavour even generated a bit of controversy as it was rumoured that Dornon had hopped on a train to ease his efforts somewhat. The press in France quickly picked up on this information, although Dornon later claimed (in his personal account of the trek published the following year by Bordeaux printers Gounouilhou*) that he had solely taken a train in Jastrow, Germany, to appear at a one-off circus event in Kustrin, before returning by train to the same point in order to carry on with his venture.

Anyhow, after 58 days and 2,875 kilometres, Dornon arrived in Moscow preceded by a police cortege. He was hailed by a crowd chanting “Vive la France!” and treated to a champagne reception, although the staff at the French exhibition weren't too enamoured; he wasn't allowed to stilt-walk at the event and wasn't even given a courtesy ticket. However, after taking part in a number of other festivities (including a race on stilts against a clown from Germany), and visiting Saint Petersburg, Dornon finally got on a train and began the return trip, which would of course take far less time… although it wasn’t incident-free: at a border crossing the souvenir engraved glasses Dornon was bringing home for friends all got broken during a search by an overly zealous customers officer.

Back in Arcachon, Dornon returned to his duties at the boulangerie. Other than dealing with visitors familiar with his recent achievements, his life regained some form of normality. His Landaise stilts did however continue to excite him far more than the bakery's output; he would take part in races and dance performances throughout the region up until his death in 1900 aged just 42. His legacy is that of reviving a Landaise tradition which had already died out, and the concept he developed lives on to this day, with many échassier folkdance troupes continuing to entertain the masses.

2 comments:

Fabulous! I just completed my first marathon this past weekend -- to think of doing more than that distance, day after day after day, on the kind of terrain and poor roads Dornon would have travelled -- and on stilts?! What a story, thank you!